4NCL Rapidplay 9th-10th October by
Lawrence Cooper
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The main playing hall |
The third 4ncl team and second individual
rapidplay took place at Harben House DeVere
venue in Newport Pagnell last weekend. The team
event had 27 teams and the individual had 74
players. The organisers generously agreed to
allow any players playing in the team event to
have free entry to the individual. The time
limit was 10 minutes plus an increment of 5
seconds a move.
The top seeds in the team event were Pride &
Prejudice comprising GMs Mark Hebden, Tony
Kosten and Aaron Summerscale as well as IM
Thomas Rendle. Second seeds were NACCPO 1
comprising GMs Gawain Jones and Keith Arkell, IM
Lawrence Cooper and one of England’s most
promising juniors, Brandon Clarke. After that
there appeared plenty of talented teams
including the Youth team of Yang-Fan Zhou,
Callum Kilpatrick, Sam Franklin and Subin Sen as
well as strong Barbican, Bristol and Cambridge
University teams. Metropolitan Police also
included GM William Watson in their team.
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Right: Mark Hebden |
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Congratulations to Barbican 1 who won the
team event and defeated both their nearest
rivals NACCPO 1 and Pride & Prejudice. Over the
years, Barbican have often defeated teams rated
well above them and this event proved no
exception. Despite the late withdrawal of GM
Jonathan Parker the team of John Cox, Matthew
Piper, Peter Poobalasingam and Rafe Martyn
finished a game point clear of the field despite
trailing NACCPO by a game point going into the
last round. Whilst Barbican had a convincing 4-0
victory NACCPO struggled to a 2-2 draw with
Bristol and even this score flattered them. It
was just enough for NACCPO to gain second place
ahead of Pride & Prejudice though.
For those wondering what NACCPO stands for it is
The National Alliance of Childhood Cancer Parent
Organisations. My association with them stems
back to when I worked at RAF Stafford and one of
my work colleagues had a son who became ill with
leukaemia. Although he made a full recovery, I
have kept links to the charity and although my
fund raising days are virtually over now I still
keep in contact and use the charity name where
possible to give them some free publicity and
hopefully increase their public profile (hence
this shameless plug!).
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Yang-Fan Zhou |
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The highest individual scores in the team
event were Matthew Piper of Barbican with an
amazing 8½/9, Victor Jones of RSI with 7½/9 and
the following players all scored 7, William
Watson who represented Metropolitan Police,
Keith Arkell & myself from NACCPO 1, Sue Maroroa
from NACCPO's U175 team, Aaron Summerscale of
Pride & Prejudice and Yang-Fan Zhou of the Youth
team.
Yang-Fan Zhou (left) also finished 3rd= in
the individual event.
Team event:
1st |
Barbican |
26½ |
2nd |
NACCPO |
25½ |
3rd |
Pride & Prejudice |
25 |
Best Junior |
Youth |
19½ |
Best U175 |
AMCA |
19½ |
Click to see the team cross-table and further
details of the event.
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Nicholas Thomas |
The individual event appeared to be between
the three GMs Gawain Jones, Mark Hebden and
Keith Arkell. As was the case in the team event,
though, results didn’t run according to grading.
Mark Hebden raced to 5/5 whilst Keith lost
ground with a defeat to David Buckley in round 3
and Gawain started with 1½/3. Mark then lost
ground losing to Thomas Rendle in round 6 and
Craig Pritchett in round 7. Thomas’s outright
lead was short-lived though as defeat to Keith
Arkell in round 7 left several players in the
joint lead on 6/7. Keith defeated Craig whilst
Tom defeated Yang-Fan to leave Keith & Tom joint
leaders on 7/8 with Keith downfloating to Alexei
Slavin with black and Tom facing James Sherwin
with white. While early draw offers from the
leaders were rejected Tom went on to win
comfortably to reach 8 whilst Keith had a hard
fought draw ending in perpetual leaving Keith on
7½ and Alexei on 7 along with Mark Hebden and
Yang-Fan Zhou.
Individual event:
1st |
Thomas
Rendle |
8/9
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2nd |
Keith
Arkell |
7½/9 |
3rd |
Mark
Hebden |
7/9 |
3rd |
Yang-Fan
Zhou |
7/9 |
3rd |
Alexei
Slavin |
7/9 |
Best Junior |
Yang-Fan
Zhou |
7/9
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Best U175 |
Hubert
Mossong |
5/9 |
Click to see the individual cross-table.
Whilst I think the event has the potential to
become very popular and successful it is clear
that improvements can be made in future years.
For example, having the matches split over two
rooms with initially pairings only available in
one room was a problem, but fortunately Claire
Summerscale was kind enough to remedy this.
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Harben restaurant |
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Matthew Piper v William Watson |
I should point out that Claire Summerscale,
Mike Truran, the captains and the arbiters did
everything they could to limit the disruption
and I am confident that the event will become an
established and successful part of the
tournament calendar, which I look forward to
playing in again in the future.
I should also mention that the live coverage
of the top two matches was a welcome innovation
and allowed those not at the venue to witness
all the blunders, thrills and spills as they
took place live. The venue and playing
conditions were also good with several internet
terminals available outside the room where the
top three matches were accommodated.
Nicholas Thomas (above right) of NACCPO 2
mated with bishop and knight in the team event.
Matthew Piper (right) scored an amazing 8½/9
faces GM William Watson.
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